European Convention Concludes Work

Published: 11 July 2003 y., Friday
With agreements to maintain veto rights on issues dealing with immigration, labor markets, cultural trade and foreign policy, the European Convention completed its historic work of drafting a constitution on Thursday. After 18 months of work at the helm of the European Convention, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing became the first delegate to sign the completed draft of the European Union's first-ever constitution on Thursday. The 105 members of the convention, representing 25 countries, have been working on the text with convention president d'Estaing and two vice-presidents for more than 16 months. On Thursday, the president thanked his delegates and wrapped up his work. "I am proud to have been your president during this time and to have steered this ship", he told the delegates. Despite storms, frosty disputes and high waves en route, the convention had made it safely to port by producing and agreeing on a draft constitution. In Brussels, there was a feeling of happiness and relief among delegates. "We can all be proud and thankful that we have been a part of this," said the German convention and European Parliament Member Klaus Haensch. Almost without exception, the delegates were open about the fact that they had fought for changes up to the very last minute. However, most of the delegates proved pleased with the number of concessions that were built in to the end draft. "We wished for more, without any doubt, from a national standpoint," said German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, who led his country's delegation. "But we weren't writing a national constitution, rather a European constitution. And in that respect this is an impressive achievement."
Šaltinis: dw-world.de
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Nuclear boss gets heat over crisis

The president of TEPCO gets an angry reaction over Japan's nuclear crisis from people forced from their homes because of it. more »

Take a bite out of your iphone

Keeping up with the global trend, a creative dessert shop in Beijing sells the most fashionable iPhone cookies and Chanel bag cakes. more »

One breathlessly long cigar

A Cuban cigar roller tops his previous world record for rolling the longest cigar and looks forward to being crowned with his fifth Guinness World Record. more »

Deal may lead to open Rafah border

Gaza residents are hopeful that the Rafah border crossing will be opened after Hamas and Fatah sign an Egyptian-brokered unity deal. more »

A hotel room good enough to eat

Fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld creates a hotel suite made entirely from chocolate. more »

Guitarists try to strum new record

Music fans in Poland attempt to beat the Guinness World Record for the largest guitar ensemble. more »

Royal wedding photos released

Clarence House releases official portraits of the Royal Wedding as the newlyweds emerge on the morning after and the clean-up begins. more »

Osama Bin Laden dead

U.S. President Barack Obama announces the U.S. has captured and killed Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan. more »

A royal bicycle for a royal wedding

German cycling fanatic Didi Senft presents his Royal Rikshaw, a bicycle created in honor of the wedding between the UK's Prince William and Kate Middleton. more »

Afghans show prison break tunnel

Officials in Afghanistan show a tunnel dug by Taliban insurgents through which hundreds of prisoners escaped. more »